Good in Bed (27 page)

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Authors: Jennifer Weiner

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I e-mailed Maxi. “Something has come up … unfortunately, not the thing I might have hoped for,” I wrote. “Bruce is dating a kindergarten teacher. I am brokenhearted and going home to eat dried turkey and let my mother feel sorry for me.”

“Good luck, then,” she'd written back immediately, even though it had to be three in the morning there. “And never mind the teacher. She's his transition object. They never last. Call or write when you're home …I'll be in the States again in the spring.”

I canceled my haircut, postponed a few telephone interviews, arranged for my neighbors to pick up my papers and my mail. I didn't call Bruce. If I decided not to stay pregnant, there'd be no reason for him to know. At this stage in our non-relationship, I couldn't very well imagine him sitting beside me in a clinic tenderly holding my hand. If I did stay pregnant … well, I'd burn that bridge when I came to it, I thought.

I hitched my bicycle rack and mountain bike to the back of my little blue Honda, put Nifkin in his traveling case, and tossed my bag in the trunk. Ready or not, I was going home.

part three
I Go Swimming
TEN

The summer between my junior and senior years at Princeton, I had an internship at the
Village Vanguard
, the oldest and most attitudinous of the alternative newsweeklies in the country.

It was a wretched three months. For one thing, it was the hottest summer in years. Manhattan was boiling. Every morning I'd start sweating the instant I exited the shower, keep sweating through the subway ride downtown, and basically continue sweating the whole day.

I worked for a horrible woman named Kiki. Six feet tall and skeletally skinny, with henna'd hair, cat's-eye thrift shop eyeglasses, and a permanent scowl, Kiki's summer uniform was a miniskirt paired with thigh-high suede boots or, alternately, the noisiest clogs in the world, topped with a tight T-shirt advertising Sammy's Roumanian Restaurant, or the Boy Scouts Gymboree, or something else so square that it was hip.

Initially, Kiki confounded me. The hipster garb made sense, and the bad attitude was par for the
Vanguard
course, but I couldn't figure out when she was getting any work done. She showed up late, left early, and took two-hour lunches in between, and seemed to spend most of her time in the office on the phone with a cadre of interchangeable-sounding friends. The mosaic nameplate on the white picket fence
she'd ironically erected around her cubicle read “associate editor.” And while she associated plenty, I'd never seen her edit.

She was, however, the master of delegating unpleasant chores. “I'm thinking about women and murder,” she'd announce on a Tuesday afternoon, idly sipping her iced coffee while I stood before her, sweating. “Why don't you see what we've done?”

This was 1991. The back issues of the
Vanguard
weren't stored online, or even on microfilm, but in huge, dusty, falling-apart, oversize binders that each weighed at least twenty pounds. These binders were housed along the hallway that linked the offices of columnists to the feeding pen of metal chairs and cigarette-scarred desks that served as workspace for the
Vanguard
's lesser luminaries. I spent my days hauling the binders off the shelves, lugging them over first to my desk, then to the copying machine, all the while trying to avoid the gin breath and wandering hands of the nation's preeminent gun rights activist, whose office was right next to the shelves, and whose favorite summer hobby seemed to be accidentally on purpose brushing against the sides of my breasts when my arms were loaded down with binders.

It was miserable. After two weeks I gave up on the subway and started taking the bus. Even though it made the ride twice as long and just as hot, it kept me out of the sweltering, fetid pit that the 116th Street subway stop had become. One afternoon in early August, I was sitting on the M140, minding my own business and sweating as usual, when, just as the bus lurched past Billy's Topless, I heard a very small, perfectly calm voice that sounded as if it was coming from the precise base of my skull.

“I know where you're going,”
said the voice. The hair on my arms and the back of my neck stood straight up. I got goose bumps and was suddenly freezing cold, and I was completely convinced that what I was hearing was … not human. A voice from the spirit world, I might have said that summer, laughing it off with my friends. But really, I thought it was the voice of God.

Of course it wasn't God, just Ellyn Weiss, the small, strange, androgynous-looking
Village Vanguard
contributing writer who'd sat down behind me and decided to say “I know where you're going”
instead of “hello.” But in my mind, I thought that if I ever got to hear the voice of God, it would sound exactly like that: small and still and sure.

Once you've heard the voice of God, it changes things. That day, when the preeminent gun rights activist waggled his fingertips against the side of my right breast as he made his lurching way back to his office, I accidentally on purpose dropped 1987 on his foot. “So sorry,” I said, sweet as pie, when he turned the color of a dirty sheet and stumbled away, never to lay a finger on me again. And when Kiki told me, “I've been thinking about women and men, and how they're different,” and asked whether I could start pulling pages, I told her a bald-faced lie. “My adviser says I won't get credit for this if all you've got me doing is photocopying,” I told her. “If you can't use me, I'm sure the copy editors can.” That very afternoon I slipped Kiki's skinny, angered clutches and spent the rest of the summer writing headlines, and going out for cheap drinks with my new copyediting colleagues.

Now, seven years later, I sat cross-legged on a picnic table, my face turned up to the pale November sunshine and my bike parked beside me, waiting to hear that voice again. Waiting for God to take notice as I sat in the center of Pennwood State Park in suburban Pennsylvania five miles from the house I grew up in, for God to look down upon me and intone either
Keep the baby
or
Call Planned Parenthood.

I stretched out my legs, lifted my arms over my head, breathing in through my nose, out through my mouth, the way Samantha's yoga instructor boyfriend said would rid my bloodstream of impurities and increase clear thoughts. If it had happened the way I figured—if I'd gotten pregnant the last time Bruce and I were together—then I was eight weeks along. How big was it? I wondered. The size of a fingertip, a pencil eraser, a tadpole?

I'd decided that I'd give God another ten minutes, when I heard something.

“Cannie?”

Ugh. That most definitely was not the voice of the divine. I felt the table tilt as Tanya hoisted herself on top of it, but I kept my eyes closed, hoping that maybe, for once, if I ignored her, she'd go away.

“Is something wrong?”

Silly me. I was forever forgetting that Tanya was a participant in a clutch of self-help groups: one for families of alcoholics, another for sexual-abuse survivors, a third called Codependent No More!, with an exclamation point as part of its name. Leaving well enough alone wasn't even a possibility. Tanya was all about intervention.

“It might help if you talk about it,” she rumbled, lighting a cigarette.

“Mm,” I said. Even with my eyes shut, I could feel her watching me.

“You got fired,” she suddenly announced.

My eyes flew open in spite of myself. “What?”

Tanya looked inordinately pleased with herself. “I figured it out, didn't I? Hah! Your mother owes me ten bucks.”

I lay on my back, waving her smoke away from me, feeling a growing annoyance. “No, I did not get fired.”

“Was it Bruce? Did something else happen?”

“Tanya, I really don't feel like discussing it right now.”

“Bruce, huh?” Tanya said mournfully. “Shit.”

I sat up again. “Why does that bother you?”

She shrugged her shoulders. “Oh, your mother figured it was something with Bruce, so if she's right, I've got to pay her.”

Great, I thought. My poor life reduced to a series of ten-dollar bets. Easy tears sprang to my eyes. It seemed these days I was crying about everything, starting with my situation and continuing relentlessly to human-interest stories that ran in the
Examiner
's Lifestyle section and Campbell's soup commercials.

“I guess you saw that last article he wrote, huh?” said Tanya.

I'd seen it. “Love, Again,” it was called, in the December issue, which had hit stands just in time to ruin my Thanksgiving. “I know I should be focusing on E. by herself,” he'd written.

I know that it's wrong to compare. But there's no way to avoid it. After The First, it seems that the next woman is, necessarily, The Second. At least in the beginning, at least for a
little while. And E. is in every way different from my first love: short where she was tall, fine and delicate where she was broad and solid, sweet where she was bitterly, mordantly funny.

“Rebound,” my friends tell me, nodding their heads like ancient rabbis instead of twenty-nine-year-old full-time temps and graduate students. “She's your rebound girl.” But what's wrong with rebound? I wonder. If there was a first and it didn't work out, then there has to be a second, a next. Eventually, you have to move on.

If first love was like exploring a new continent, I think that second love is like moving to a new neighborhood. You already know there will be streets and houses. Now you have the pleasure of learning what the houses look like inside, how the streets feel beneath your feet. You know the rules, the basic vocabulary: phone calls, Valentine's Day chocolates, how to comfort a woman when she tells you what's gone wrong in her day, in her life. Now you can fine-tune. You find her nickname, how she likes her hand held, the sweet spot just beneath the curve of her jaw …

And that was as far as I'd made it before running to the toilet for my second hurl of the day. Just the idea of Bruce kissing someone else on the sweet spot just beneath the curve of her jaw—even the thought of him noticing such a thing—was enough to send my already queasy stomach into revolt. He doesn't love me anymore. I had to keep reminding myself of that, and every time I thought those words, it was like hearing them for the first time, in all-capital italic letters, being boomed out by the guy who did voice-overs for movie previews:
HE DOESN'T LOVE ME ANYMORE.

“It must be tough,” mused Tanya.

“It's ridiculous,” I snapped. And really, the whole situation was pretty ridiculous. After three years of resisting his pleas, his offers, his desperate importunings, and biweekly proclamations that I was the only woman he'd ever want, we were apart, I was pregnant, and he'd
found somebody else, and I would, most likely, never see him again. (
Never
was another word I'd hear in my head a lot, as in: You'll never wake up next to him again, or, You'll never talk to him on the telephone.)

“So what are you going to do?” she asked.

“That's the big question,” I said, and hopped off the table and onto my bike, heading back home. Except it didn't feel like home anymore and, thanks to Tanya's invasion, I wasn't sure it ever would again.

The less you know about your parents' sex lives, the better. Sure, you figure, they had to have done it at least once, to get you, and then maybe a few more times, if you had brothers and sisters, but that was procreation; that was duty, and the thought of them using their various openings and attachments for fun, for pleasure—in short, in the manner you, their child, would like to be using yours—was nothing short of sick-making. Particularly if they were having the kind of trendy, cutting-edge love life that was all the rage in the late 1990s. You don't need to know about your parents having sex, and you especially don't need to know about them having hipper sex than you are.

Unfortunately, thanks to Tanya's self-help training, and my mother's being rendered senseless by love, I got the whole story.

It started when my brother, Josh, came home from college and was rummaging in my mother's bathroom for the toenail clippers, when he came across a small stack of Hallmark greeting cards—the kind with abstract watercolors of birds and trees on the front, and florid calligraphied sentiments inside. “Thinking of you,” read the front of one, and inside, beneath the rhymed Hallmark couplet, someone had written, “Annie, after three months, the fire still burns strong.” No signature.

“I think they're from this woman,” said Josh.

“What woman?” I asked.

“The one who's living here,” said Josh. “Mom says she's her swim coach.”

A live-in swim coach? This was the first I'd heard of it.

“It's probably nothing,” I told Josh.

“It's probably nothing,” Bruce told me when I talked to him that night.

And that was how I started my conversation with my mother when she called at work two days later: “This is probably nothing, but …”

“Yes?” asked my mother.

“Is there, um, someone else … living there?”

“My swim coach,” she said.

“You know, the Olympics were last year,” I said, playing along.

“Tanya's a friend of mine from the Jewish Community Center. She's between apartments, and she's staying in Josh's room for a few days.”

This sounded slightly suspect. My mother didn't have friends who lived in apartments, let alone who slept over because they were between them. Her friends all lived in the houses their ex-husbands had left, just like she did. But I let it go until the next time I called home and an unfamiliar voice answered the telephone.

“H'lo?” the strange voice growled. It was, at first, impossible to tell whether I was talking to a woman or a man. But whoever it was sounded as if they'd just gotten out of bed, even though it was almost eight o'clock on a Friday night.

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